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Dragon Boat Race Registration 2025

Dragon Boat Race Registration | January 2nd-May 7th, 2025 | Register
Registration for Mixed, Women’s, and Open Division From 7am January 2nd, 2025 through May 7th.

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Race Weekend 2025

Race Weekend | June 7-8, 2025 | South Hawthorne Waterfront Park, Portland Oregon
Our annual traditional-style dragon boat race held during the Portland Rose Festival. Free to the public. Come and enjoy an exciting weekend of Dragon Boat Races and local food and shopping vendors.

Dragon boat ‘awakening’ marks beginning of race season

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Elliot Njus | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Awakening of the dragon ceremony begins Dragon Boat racing season
Archive: Google Photo Album 2016 Eye-Dotting Ceremony

Flocks of Portlanders wearing life vests and carrying wooden paddles? It must be dragon boat season.

It began Saturday with the “awakening” of the boats, a ceremony held each year to promote safety and good luck in the coming months of practice. The season ends with the Rose Festival dragon boat races, held in June. More than 65 teams are expected to compete this year.

Continue reading “Dragon boat ‘awakening’ marks beginning of race season”

Annual dragon boat race bonds cultures, survivors

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Tara Kulash | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Archive: Google Photos Album – 2015 Race Weekend

Portland dragon boat racers may be in competition, but they’re also a community.

More than 60 teams competed Saturday and Sunday in the dragon boat races on the Willamette River near downtown. The event, in its 26th year, is part of Portland’s annual Rose Festival and stems from the city’s sisterhood with Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Tom Crowder, race director, said the mission of the Portland-Kaohsiung Sister City Association is to spread cultural awareness, and he believes dragon boat racing helps to provide that sense of community.

Continue reading “Annual dragon boat race bonds cultures, survivors”

Awakening of dragon boats kicks off Portland Rose Festival racing season

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Grant Butler | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Dragon boats Awakened for Rose Festival (2015)
Archive: Google Photos – 2015 Eye-Dotting Ceremony

Thanks to “How to Train Your Dragon,” “The Hobbit” and “Game of Thrones,” dragons have become pop-culture stars the last few years. But for fans of the Portland Rose Festival, the only dragons that matter are the ones that ply the waters of the Willamette River each spring.

Saturday afternoon, the Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race season kicked off with an “awakening” ceremony at Riverplace Marina, featuring Buddhist prayers, lion dancing, firecrackers, and a water cannon salute from the Portland Fireboat.

Unlike some years, the weather cooperated, with patchy sun and just a few scattered raindrops. A bit of wind provided the only significant challenge for the racers as they took the eight colorfully painted boats out for the first time this year.

Continue reading “Awakening of dragon boats kicks off Portland Rose Festival racing season”

Photos: Dragon boat racing tradition continues during Portland’s 2014 Rose Festival

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

2014 Portland Rose Festival Dragon Boat Races
Archives: Google Photos Album – 2014 Race Weekend

By Xiaojie Ouyang | The Oregonian/OregonLive

The annual dragon boat races have been going for 25 years now and this past weekend, June 7-8, the tradition continued strong in downtown Portland.

More than 80 different teams competed on the Willamette River near Tom McCall Waterfront Park. The competition was broken down into three different divisions: Mixed, women and high school.

The eight Taiwan-style dragon boats that teams, consisting of 23 people, rowed in were provided through the Portland-Kaohsiung Sister City Association.


Blind, deaf teams at no disadvantage in the Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

2013 Portland Rose Festival dragon boat races
Archive: Google Photos Ablum – 2013 Race Weekend

By Jamie Hale | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Portland’s dragon boat races attract people of all stripes. There are the trained athletes, the casual exercisers, the stay-at-home parents, the business professionals, the senior citizens, the teenagers and, of course, the deaf and the blind.

Lack of hearing or sight doesn’t mean squat in the dragon boat community. It’s a sport that requires steering and direction from the tiller of the boat – something the blind boats need a hand with – but the rest of the crew needs little help when it comes to racing.

Continue reading “Blind, deaf teams at no disadvantage in the Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race”

Dragon boat team welcomes breast cancer survivors

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Pink Phoenix Outreach Team

Pink Phoenix, the United States’ first dragon boat team comprised of only breast cancer survivors, invites survivors to its annual Start o’ the Season Kickoff & Open House for Prospective Members on Saturday, January 25, 2014 from 9:00 am to 11:00 am.

This welcoming group promotes fitness through dragon boating and participates in regional breast cancer awareness and outreach activities. Newcomers will learn about the fastest growing team water sport in the world and meet team members who range in age from 29 – 94. Pink Phoenix practices from the downtown RiverPlace Marina, but members come from as far away as Banks, Canby, Scappoose and Ridgefield to paddle and enjoy their recreational sport.

Continue reading “Dragon boat team welcomes breast cancer survivors”

Rose Festival 2013: Dragon Boat Races hit the water with new, faster craft

Rose Festival 2013: Dragon Boat Races hit the water with new, faster craft

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Becca Stanek, The Oregonian

2013 Portland Rose Festival dragon boat races

Red paddles and rainbow boats added a splash of color Saturday morning to the Willamette River for the 25th anniversary of the Rose Festival’s Dragon Boat Races.

Sixty-nine teams and hundreds of spectators gathered at the Tom McCall Waterfront Park to compete and cheer each other on throughout the daylong event. Teams of 20, ranging from high school students to corporate representatives and groups of breast cancer survivors, paddled across the river in heats of four boats.

The excitement at this year’s event was about more than the races though.

Continue reading “Rose Festival 2013: Dragon Boat Races hit the water with new, faster craft”

Breast Cancer Survivors Thrive on Dragon Boat Team: New Members Welcomed

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Pink Phoenix Outreach Team

Pink Phoenix, America’s first dragon boat team comprised wholly of breast cancer survivors, invites survivors to its annual Team Meeting & Open House for Prospective Members on Saturday, February 2, 2013 from 9:00 am to noon.

Visitors will learn about an exciting water sport and meet Pink Phoenix team members who range in age from 33 – 93. Entering their 16th season, this welcoming group promotes fitness through dragon boating and participates in breast cancer awareness and outreach activities.

The Pinks, as they are known in the paddling community because of their distinctive pink life vests, compete in three Portland races annually. Travel is not required, but the team often sends a crew to dragon boat festivals in California, Washington and British Columbia. Newcomers are welcome as the team balances their competitive spirit with the growth and development of new paddlers.

Registration for the Open House begins at 9:00 am in the Auditorium (Building 2) on the Legacy Good Samaritan Medical Center campus, 1040 NW 22nd, Portland OR. Free parking is available in Parking Structure 2 on Marshall Street.


Lesbian dragon boat team Amazons still paddling after 20 years in water

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

By Special to The Oregonian

Amid a heated political atmosphere, Chris Mack founded a lesbian team in 1992 to compete in the Portland Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race. The anti-gay political efforts of the Oregon Citizens Alliance, a conservative political activist organization, helped inspire Mack to create the upbeat, highly visible team.

Mack and other gay women and men had been participating in the Rose Festival for a couple of years, entering a float in the Starlight Parade to foster a favorable image of the gay community. Mack, an all-around jock who played field hockey and basketball in college and high school, said she wanted to take part in the festival in another way.

Continue reading “Lesbian dragon boat team Amazons still paddling after 20 years in water”

Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race builds camaraderie, fuels competition among paddlers

Oregonlive.com | Source | PDF

Dragon Boat Race at 2012 Portland Rose Festival
Archive: Google Photos Album – 2012 Race Weekend

By Rebecca Woolington | The Oregonian/OregonLive

At Saturday’s Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race, the high-schoolers lined up first. They were pumped. And they let everyone know it.

Members of the Wilson High School Amazon Dragon Boat team turned up tunes on a boombox. They danced, jumped and slapped each other high fives as they waited to kick off the day’s first race.

Meanwhile, their competitors chest-bumped and chanted cheers. But the competition didn’t phase Wilson. They arrived with handprints painted on their faces.

“It adds more intensity — it gets us into it,” said 17-year-old Wilson junior Carmen Alzaga after the race, showing off the large, green handprint that encompassed most of the left side of her face. Her team came in third during the first race of the weekend-long competition.

Continue reading “Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race builds camaraderie, fuels competition among paddlers”